⛑ Automated developer-oriented status page
Go to file
TwinProduction f7c2905aa4 Minor update
2020-09-17 23:15:59 -04:00
.github Add PagerDuty integration guide 2020-09-17 23:13:00 -04:00
alerting Rename services[].alerts[]'s threshold and success-before-resolved to failure-threshold and success-threshold 2020-09-16 20:22:33 -04:00
client Add support for headers, method, body and json path with arrays 2020-04-14 19:20:00 -04:00
config Rename services[].alerts[]'s threshold and success-before-resolved to failure-threshold and success-threshold 2020-09-16 20:22:33 -04:00
core Rename services[].alerts[]'s threshold and success-before-resolved to failure-threshold and success-threshold 2020-09-16 20:22:33 -04:00
docs Minor update 2020-09-17 23:15:59 -04:00
example Add Docker Compose example (#11) 2020-09-06 12:37:31 -04:00
jsonpath Add support for getting the length of the string or the slice of a json path 2020-08-12 21:42:13 -04:00
metric Implement Prometheus metrics 2019-11-16 16:52:11 -05:00
static Add subtle Github link in bottom right corner 2020-09-08 18:28:19 -04:00
vendor Update dependencies 2020-09-16 19:32:13 -04:00
watchdog Add support for PagerDuty 2020-09-16 19:26:19 -04:00
.dockerignore Add .idea to .dockerignore 2019-10-20 22:38:50 -04:00
.gitignore Remove unnecessarily ignored rules 2020-09-01 00:28:49 -04:00
config.yaml Update example config 2020-09-14 20:05:00 -04:00
Dockerfile Store config in config instead of root directory 2019-12-28 12:55:00 -05:00
go.mod Update dependencies 2020-09-16 19:32:13 -04:00
go.sum Update dependencies 2020-09-16 19:32:13 -04:00
gzip.go Stop using CDNs + Remove bootstrap.min.js because it wasn't necessary 2020-09-06 00:55:01 -04:00
LICENSE.md Minor update 2020-04-22 23:54:30 -04:00
main.go Stop using CDNs + Remove bootstrap.min.js because it wasn't necessary 2020-09-06 00:55:01 -04:00
README.md Update documentation 2020-09-16 20:55:15 -04:00

Gatus

build Go Report Card Docker pulls

A service health dashboard in Go that is meant to be used as a docker image with a custom configuration file.

I personally deploy it in my Kubernetes cluster and have it monitor the status of my core applications: https://status.twinnation.org/

Table of Contents

Features

The main features of Gatus are:

  • Highly flexible health check conditions: While checking the response status may be enough for some use cases, Gatus goes much further and allows you to add conditions on the response time, the response body and even the IP address.
  • Ability to use Gatus for user acceptance tests: Thanks to the point above, you can leverage this application to create automated user acceptance tests.
  • Very easy to configure: Not only is the configuration designed to be as readable as possible, it's also extremely easy to add a new service or a new endpoint to monitor.
  • Alerting: While having a pretty visual dashboard is useful to keep track of the state of your application(s), you probably don't want to stare at it all day. Thus, notifications via Slack, PagerDuty and Twilio are supported out of the box with the ability to configure a custom alerting provider for any needs you might have, whether it be a different provider or a custom application that manages automated rollbacks.
  • Metrics
  • Low resource consumption: As with most Go applications, the resource footprint that this application requires is negligibly small.

Usage

By default, the configuration file is expected to be at config/config.yaml.

You can specify a custom path by setting the GATUS_CONFIG_FILE environment variable.

Here's a simple example:

metrics: true         # Whether to expose metrics at /metrics
services:
  - name: twinnation  # Name of your service, can be anything
    url: "https://twinnation.org/health"
    interval: 30s     # Duration to wait between every status check (default: 60s)
    conditions:
      - "[STATUS] == 200"         # Status must be 200
      - "[BODY].status == UP"     # The json path "$.status" must be equal to UP
      - "[RESPONSE_TIME] < 300"   # Response time must be under 300ms
  - name: example
    url: "https://example.org/"
    interval: 30s
    conditions:
      - "[STATUS] == 200"

This example would look like this:

Simple example

Note that you can also add environment variables in the configuration file (i.e. $DOMAIN, ${DOMAIN})

Configuration

Parameter Description Default
debug Whether to enable debug logs false
metrics Whether to expose metrics at /metrics false
services List of services to monitor Required []
services[].name Name of the service. Can be anything. Required ""
services[].url URL to send the request to Required ""
services[].conditions Conditions used to determine the health of the service []
services[].interval Duration to wait between every status check 60s
services[].method Request method GET
services[].graphql Whether to wrap the body in a query param ({"query":"$body"}) false
services[].body Request body ""
services[].headers Request headers {}
services[].alerts[].type Type of alert. Valid types: slack, pagerduty, twilio, custom Required ""
services[].alerts[].enabled Whether to enable the alert false
services[].alerts[].failure-threshold Number of failures in a row needed before triggering the alert 3
services[].alerts[].success-threshold Number of successes in a row before an ongoing incident is marked as resolved 2
services[].alerts[].send-on-resolved Whether to send a notification once a triggered alert is marked as resolved false
services[].alerts[].description Description of the alert. Will be included in the alert sent ""
alerting Configuration for alerting {}
alerting.slack Webhook to use for alerts of type slack ""
alerting.pagerduty PagerDuty Events API v2 integration key. Used for alerts of type pagerduty ""
alerting.twilio Settings for alerts of type twilio ""
alerting.twilio.sid Twilio account SID Required ""
alerting.twilio.token Twilio auth token Required ""
alerting.twilio.from Number to send Twilio alerts from Required ""
alerting.twilio.to Number to send twilio alerts to Required ""
alerting.custom Configuration for custom actions on failure or alerts ""
alerting.custom.url Custom alerting request url ""
alerting.custom.body Custom alerting request body. ""
alerting.custom.headers Custom alerting request headers {}

Conditions

Here are some examples of conditions you can use:

Condition Description Passing values Failing values
[STATUS] == 200 Status must be equal to 200 200 201, 404, ...
[STATUS] < 300 Status must lower than 300 200, 201, 299 301, 302, ...
[STATUS] <= 299 Status must be less than or equal to 299 200, 201, 299 301, 302, ...
[STATUS] > 400 Status must be greater than 400 401, 402, 403, 404 400, 200, ...
[RESPONSE_TIME] < 500 Response time must be below 500ms 100ms, 200ms, 300ms 500ms, 501ms
[BODY] == 1 The body must be equal to 1 1 Anything else
[BODY].data.id == 1 The jsonpath $.data.id is equal to 1 {"data":{"id":1}}
[BODY].data[0].id == 1 The jsonpath $.data[0].id is equal to 1 {"data":[{"id":1}]}
len([BODY].data) > 0 Array at jsonpath $.data has less than 5 elements {"data":[{"id":1}]}
len([BODY].name) == 8 String at jsonpath $.name has a length of 8 {"name":"john.doe"} {"name":"bob"}

Alerting

Configuring Slack alerts

alerting:
  slack: "https://hooks.slack.com/services/**********/**********/**********"
services:
  - name: twinnation
    interval: 30s
    url: "https://twinnation.org/health"
    alerts:
      - type: slack
        enabled: true
        description: "healthcheck failed 3 times in a row"
        send-on-resolved: true
      - type: slack
        enabled: true
        failure-threshold: 5
        description: "healthcheck failed 5 times in a row"
        send-on-resolved: true
    conditions:
      - "[STATUS] == 200"
      - "[BODY].status == UP"
      - "[RESPONSE_TIME] < 300"

Here's an example of what the notifications look like:

Slack notifications

Configuring PagerDuty alerts

It is highly recommended to set services[].alerts[].send-on-resolved to true for alerts of type pagerduty, because unlike other alerts, the operation resulting from setting said parameter to true will not create another incident, but mark the incident as resolved on PagerDuty instead.

alerting:
  pagerduty: "********************************"
services:
  - name: twinnation
    interval: 30s
    url: "https://twinnation.org/health"
    alerts:
      - type: pagerduty
        enabled: true
        failure-threshold: 3
        success-threshold: 5
        description: "healthcheck failed 3 times in a row"
        send-on-resolved: true
    conditions:
      - "[STATUS] == 200"
      - "[BODY].status == UP"
      - "[RESPONSE_TIME] < 300"

Configuring Twilio alerts

alerting:
  twilio:
    sid: "..."
    token: "..."
    from: "+1-234-567-8901"
    to: "+1-234-567-8901"
services:
  - name: twinnation
    interval: 30s
    url: "https://twinnation.org/health"
    alerts:
      - type: twilio
        enabled: true
        failure-threshold: 5
        description: "healthcheck failed 5 times in a row"
        send-on-resolved: true
    conditions:
      - "[STATUS] == 200"
      - "[BODY].status == UP"
      - "[RESPONSE_TIME] < 300"

Configuring custom alerts

While they're called alerts, you can use this feature to call anything.

For instance, you could automate rollbacks by having an application that keeps tracks of new deployments, and by leveraging Gatus, you could have Gatus call that application endpoint when a service starts failing. Your application would then check if the service that started failing was recently deployed, and if it was, then automatically roll it back.

The values [ALERT_DESCRIPTION] and [SERVICE_NAME] are automatically substituted for the alert description and the service name respectively in the body (alerting.custom.body) as well as the url (alerting.custom.url).

If you have send-on-resolved set to true, you may want to use [ALERT_TRIGGERED_OR_RESOLVED] to differentiate the notifications. It will be replaced for either TRIGGERED or RESOLVED, based on the situation.

For all intents and purpose, we'll configure the custom alert with a Slack webhook, but you can call anything you want.

alerting:
  custom:
    url: "https://hooks.slack.com/services/**********/**********/**********"
    method: "POST"
    body: |
      {
        "text": "[ALERT_TRIGGERED_OR_RESOLVED]: [SERVICE_NAME] - [ALERT_DESCRIPTION]"
      }      
services:
  - name: twinnation
    interval: 30s
    url: "https://twinnation.org/health"
    alerts:
      - type: custom
        enabled: true
        failure-threshold: 10
        success-threshold: 3
        send-on-resolved: true
        description: "healthcheck failed 10 times in a row"
    conditions:
      - "[STATUS] == 200"
      - "[BODY].status == UP"
      - "[RESPONSE_TIME] < 300"

Docker

docker run -p 8080:8080 --name gatus twinproduction/gatus

Running the tests

go test ./... -mod vendor

Using in Production

See the example folder.

FAQ

Sending a GraphQL request

By setting services[].graphql to true, the body will automatically be wrapped by the standard GraphQL query parameter.

For instance, the following configuration:

services:
  - name: filter users by gender
    url: http://localhost:8080/playground
    method: POST
    graphql: true
    body: |
      {
        user(gender: "female") {
          id
          name
          gender
          avatar
        }
      }      
    headers:
      Content-Type: application/json
    conditions:
      - "[STATUS] == 200"
      - "[BODY].data.user[0].gender == female"

will send a POST request to http://localhost:8080/playground with the following body:

{"query":"      {\n        user(gender: \"female\") {\n          id\n          name\n          gender\n          avatar\n        }\n      }"}